Micro Chapter 13 W
allocative efficiency with technological advance
a more-preferred mix of goods and services; increases utility
modern view of technological advance
capitalism is the driving force, profit is the incentive, rivalry among firms is the cause, starts from within the company
optimal amount of R&D
compare marginal benefit and cost, where MB=MC or r=i
imitation problem
competitors may imitate innovation and reduce profit potential
R&D Expenditures
direct efforts toward invention, innovation, and diffusion
invention
discovery of new product or process through the use of imagination, ingenious thinking, and experimentation
role of oligopoly
economic profit can finance R&D; barriers to entry can foster R&D due to long run profit; economies of scale allow firm to spread R&D cost over large output; firms may not pursue new products that would render existing products obsolete
marginal benefit
expected rate of return "r" from last dollar spent on R&D
innovation
first successful commercial introduction of a new product, the first use of a new method, or the creation of a new business enterprise
role of monopolistic competition
incentive to differentiate but profits are temporary
role of pure competition
incentive to innovate to improve products and lower costs, but rate of return is low due to ease of entry; small firm size and normal long run profits mean these firms may not be able to finance R&D
productive efficiency with technological advance
increasing productivity of inputs, reducing ATC; shifts PPC outward
entrepreneurs
initiator, innovator, risk bearer
marginal cost
interest-rate cost-of-funds: bank loans, bonds, retained earnings, venture capital, personal savings cost of funds (interest rate) is the same regardless od the source or amount of funds
other innovators
key people involved in the pursuit of innovation who do not bear personal financial risk; sometimes referred to as intrapreneurs since they provide the spirit of entrepreneurship within existing firms
fast-second strategy
let smaller firms innovate, the imitate or acquire smaller firm
role of pure monopoly
little incentive to innovate due to strong barriers to entry protecting profits
technological advance
new and better products; better ways of producing and distributing those products; occurs over the very long run; profit is the incentive
inverted U theory of R&D
relationship between market structure and technological advance; R&D spending is weak at low and high industry concentrations; reaches a peak at 50%; loose oligopoly is the optimal structure for R&D spending; empirical evidence generally supports the theory
expected-rate-of-return curve
slopes downward due to diminishing returns for R&D expenditures; expected, not guaranteed returns
diffusion
spread of innovation through imitation or copying; firms embed new innovation; crucial to capitalism